Read The Marriage Prize Online
Authors: Virginia Henley
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General
informed him the moment Edward had taken his troops north.
The prince strode to the map table and fixed Gilbert with a
piercing stare.
"Three days ago, when I marched my men to Kenilworth,
Mortimer's Welsh spies informed me that Simon de Montfort's
army was winding its weary way toward Hereford. I withdrew
my entire army, believing your force of four thousand was an
adequate deterrent to the barons. Today I have irrefutable
information that not only has de Mont-fort crossed the River
Severn, but the Avon as wel . Explain yourself, Gilbert!"
As Rodger de Leyburn listened to the cutting words, he
recognized the deadly dangerous tone of Edward's voice.
Young Gilbert might have
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a fiery temper, but Rod knew the sparks de Clare could
generate would soon be smothered by the conflagration of the
infamous Plantagenet fury, should the prince unleash it.
Gilbert, his face flushed as bright as his hair, complained,
"Since I do not speak Welsh, Mortimer's informants would not
deal with me! They showed nothing but contempt for my
youth."
"They are paid to spy, not kiss the arse of our arrogant English
earls. But do not despair, Gilbert, I wil give you every chance
to make amends for your shortcomings, and for your youth!"
John de Warenne and Rodger de Leyburn were studying the
map on the table before them. "By crossing at Pershore,
Simon de Montfort has revealed where the barons wil make
their stand," de Warenne said decisively.
"It is Evesham, my lord, nothing could be more certain," de
Ley-burn confirmed. As Edward bent his head over the map,
Rod drew his finger in a straight line across the Severn and
Avon rivers to Evesham.
Edward raised his eyes to Mortimer. "What numbers?"
"Four thousand, tired, hungry, and badly equipped. No more
than two hundred mounted barons and knights; the rest are
foot soldiers, except a few hundred Welsh archers Llewelyn
grudgingly supplied."
"Counting the men of Gloucester, we have more than twice
their number; five hundred mounted knights, and enough
horses to mount another three or four hundred armed men,"
Rodger confirmed.
"With such an overwhelming advantage, our men wil be able
to snatch a few hours' sleep," Bassingbourne concluded with
relief.
Edward's fist smote the map table. "They can sleep when
they're dead! Battles are won with fury and speed! If we delay
until morning, it could give young Simon de Montfort time to
gather the forces we scattered, and ride to his sire's aid."
Rodger de Leyburn looked down at his hands and wondered
if his act of mercy in sparing young Simon would come back
to haunt him.
"Sound the trumpets," Edward ordered. "Close your ears to their bitching and complaining. If you've trained them wel , your
men wil fal into line. Before dusk fal s, I want them on the road
leading to the Vale of Evesham. I wil now listen to your
suggestions for strategy."
Most of his lieutenants voiced their ideas for achieving the
maximum
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military impact, while Gilbert de Clare maintained a wise
silence. When they were done, Edward grinned for the first
time since entering the war room. "I said I'd listen; I didn't say I would use your suggestions." His jest broke the tension that
had been steadily building to an unbearable pitch. "I want two
flying wings to prevent our enemy's escape. Mortimer, you wil
take two thousand Marcher barons to the east and plant
yourself astride the road to London. Gilbert the Red, you wil
take your wing of two thousand Gloucester men-at-arms to the
west and make sure the enemy does not retreat back across
the River Avon. I wil lead the rest of my lieutenants, with their
force of five thousand, and drive head-on into the baronial
army."
"Simon de Montfort must know our numbers. He wil be feeling
downcast and desperate at the moment," Lincoln de Warenne
surmised.
"Never think it for a moment," Edward said. "He is a veteran warlord who has emerged victorious from every battle he ever
fought. He knew we withdrew, and no doubt guessed it was to
fight his son's army. He is moving with such expediency
because he hopes to reach the other baronial force and unite
them. He has no idea we vanquished them and returned so
quickly; Simon de Montfort would never march into the jaws of
a victorious enemy."
"I whol y agree with Edward," Rodger de Leyburn said.
"Simon de Montfort is an inspired and daring general with a
valiant heart; he is also shrewd, devious, and ruthless. He
believes in his cause, and above al he believes in himself! He
is never downcast or despairing before a battle; make no
mistake, this wil be the fight of our lives."
It took a monumental effort by Lord Edward and al of his
lieutenants to organize the massive undertaking, but by the
lieutenants to organize the massive undertaking, but by the
time dusk fel , the entire royal army was on its way to
Evesham. In the middle of the night, they arrived at the juncture
where the two winged divisions must separate from the main
body of the army. Edward cal ed a last, brief council of war,
gathering his lieutenants about him to give them their final
orders, then he turned to Rodger. "Did you bring the thirteen
baronial banners we captured at Kenilworth?"
Rodger de Leyburn had known al night that the question
would come; Edward was far too shrewd to forget about the
banners.- He
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would al ow nothing to stand in his way. He was prepared to
do anything or sacrifice anyone to achieve his goal. Rod set
aside any repulsion he felt. "Aye, my lord, I brought the
banners."
"Give them to the flag bearers to hoist before us in the
vanguard. This al ows us to add the element of surprise; our
enemy wil think we are the baronial army come to aid them."
******************
sunrise. Thunder rumbled overhead, awakening the baronial
men-at-arms, who had barely had time to drop to the ground
for a much-needed sleep. When Edward's army came over
Green Hil on the northern side of the town, Simon de
Montfort's scouts mistook it for the baronial army and gave the
news to their leader that his son had at long last arrived. Hope
and joy, however, turned to alarm and desperation as the
deception was discovered.
As the barons scrambled to throw on their chain mail and
accoutre themselves with weapons, a scout brought de
Montfort the news that Mortimer's forces blocked any retreat
to the east. Simon summoned his lieutenants, along with two
of his sons, Henry and Guy. "It is possible that Edward has
positioned himself between our two armies to keep us
separated," he told the men. "Our best chance is to form a
wedge and drive up the hil into their center, break through the
enemy's line, and hope we find our al ies awaiting us on the
other side."
"Why don't we retreat back across the River Avon?" Henry
cried with alarm, seeing the royalist army spread across an
area fifteen hundred yards wide, with double their baronial
fighting force.
"Just as he has deployed forces to the east, Edward wil of a
certainty be blocking the west. His strategy wil be flawless; he
learned it from me." Simon de Montfort mounted the destrier
his squire brought forward, unsheathed his broadsword, and
led his men into battle.
The very first attack drove into Edward's forces hard, in the
center of the line of troops. The impact of the flying wedge
shocked but did not break through the line. Instead, the line of
Edward's troops bent and closed in on each side of the
barons, surrounding them, trapping them.
Above the soldiers, lightning flashed and thunder roared,
melding 307
with the horrific sounds of battle, drowning out the cries of
mortal y wounded men and the screams of terrified,
maddened horses. The most furious fighting was centered
among the mounted knights of both armies. There was no
time for any man to do aught but protect his body with his
shield and, at the same time, slaughter his enemy with his
weapon. The blow of battle-ax, the jab of pike, the swing of
mace, the stab of spear, and the thrust of sword took their
terrible tol on flesh, and muscle, and sinew.
Blood was everywhere, the crimson sight of it, the sticky feel
of it, the metal ic smel of it, and the salty taste of it. Blood
splattered, sprayed, spil ed, bubbled, oozed, gushed, and
flowed. The ground, littered with fal en weapons, horses, and
men, became drenched and soaked with blood, vomit, piss,
and entrails, al churned into foul, slimy, dark-red mud by the
frenzied, trampling hooves of the warhorses.
Edward swung his broadsword with the unflagging strength of
a colossus. His reach was longer, his energy greater, his wil
to win stronger than any other warrior at the Battle of
Evesham. Rodger de Leyburn, fighting at Edward's side, saw
the prince's destrier sink to its knees and rol on its side.
Edward was out of the saddle in a flash, and so was Rodger.
He handed Edward Stygian's reins, but did not wait for him to
mount. Instead, he turned and took Griffin's horse. That horse
lasted an hour, then went down beneath him, mortal y
wounded. Again he turned, but this time his squire was
nowhere in sight and Rodger was forced to fight on foot. The
arm that held his shield became so numbed, he could no
longer feel the blows it took. The ache in his sword arm
spread up through his shoulder and down his back. He began
to stagger on legs that now trembled with muscle fatigue.
A huge destrier caught Rodger's attention. He wiped the
sweat from his eyes and saw Simon de Montfort mounted on
its back. The great warlord at the height of his powers was
such an impressive sight that for one moment Rodger
doubted that Edward would be able to prevail against such a
formidable foe. Rod banished the thought immediately and
gave al his attention to dispatching any of the enemy foolish
enough to come directly into his path.
The battle went on for hours, but slowly, gradual y, inevitably,
the larger royal army gained on the smal er baronial force.
Then, when
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Mortimer and Gloucester realized there was no chance for the
enemy to flee, they brought in their forces to fight. Edward's
mounted knights and foot soldiers decimated Simon's army,
then they ravaged, and final y vanquished their enemy. As the
dark clouds rol ed away and the sun came out, Edward's men
raised their heads and saw there were no combatants left to
fight. The entire baronial forces were either dead, wounded,
or begging for mercy and surrendering their weapons.
or begging for mercy and surrendering their weapons.
Edward, stil astride Stygian, picked his way through the
carnage and slowly realized the only men left standing were
his own. He saw Rodger de Leyburn, who had been fighting
on foot, and urged the horse toward him. Edward had a
stunned look on his face as he slowly dismounted and looked
dazedly at his friend.
"Do you know what this means?" Rodger cried.
"I won," Edward croaked.
Rodger raised his sword on high and roared, "Thine is the
kingdom, the power, and the glory!"
"Splendor of God, I won!" Edward cried, throwing his arms
about Rodger and lifting him into the air. Al about them the
cheering and the tumult were deafening as victorious men-at-
arms suddenly realized the battle was over and they had won
the day!
The battle fever soon subsided in the two men and was
replaced by compassion for their foes whom they had so
thoroughly defeated. They cal ed for fresh horses and, with
their squires, traversed the battlefield, searching for their own
wounded men while at the same time doing a cursory tal y of
the losses from both sides. When they came across young
Guy de Montfort, who was badly wounded, Edward ordered
that he be carried from the field and his injuries tended without
delay. When they discovered the body of Henry de Montfort,
tears came to Edward's eyes for his boyhood companion.
John de Warenne's joy in victory soon turned to sorrow when
he found that his brother Lincoln had been slain. They met him
as he carried his brother's body from the field. "Blood of God,
Lincoln has two young children—if one of us had to die, why
wasn't it me?"
Rodger de Leyburn said the only thing he could. "You must be
their father now, John."
There was a crowd of Mortimer's men gathered about the
spot
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where the body of Simon de Montfort had fal en. Their
bloodlust was stil high for the earl whom they had long hated,
and they were in the process of dismembering his corpse
when Edward and Rodger came upon the vengeful, senseless
savagery. Both men recoiled with horror when they saw